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Newbold

Uniquely renovated 3-story home located on one of the best blocks of Newbold- right down the street from South Philly Tap Room! Tastefully restored home with a nod to modern design aesthetics and function while maintaining historic charm.

Enter through the vestibule into an open first floor- big living room and dining room with industrial modern pendant light. Powder room on first floor and basement entrance outfitted to serve as coat 'closet'.

Open Houses for May 1 & 2

36 open houses featured this weekend in Graduate Hospital, Point Breeze, Newbold, Southwest Center City, and Grays Ferry. Plenty to choose from, here is the entire list of open houses for this weekend with dates and times.

Graduate HospitalPoint BreezeNewboldSouthwest Center CityGrays Ferry

See our team's open houses here Philly Living Open Houses

Download the complete list with dates and times here

Complete list of open houses this weekend in text belowCall us at 215-392-0230 to schedule a private appointment to see any of these!

Architect's rendering of the new affordable homes to be built on Colorado and Bouvier streets in Newbold

By Gabriel Gottlieb

The Zoning Board of Adjustment approved variances for 15 affordable rowhomes along Colorado and Bouvier streets in Newbold/Point Breeze at a hearing on Jan. 28. The Redevelopment Authority partnered with Innova Redevelopment to build the homes on the properties, which are all empty lots right now, and Plumbob, Onion Flats' architectural arm, to design the homes. The homes will be in the vicinity of Reed, Dickinson, 17th and 18th streets in South Philadelphia. The development has the support of the Newbold Neighbors Association, the local registered community organization for the site.

Click Here to Download the Report

Stu Bykofsky takes a look at the Feibush-Johnson dustup; Conshohocken's small merchants come together for an unusual Black Friday shopping experience; Northeast high schoolers weigh in with recommendations to fix the mess that is Roosevelt Boulevard. Maybe we should make them transportation engineers; and the owner of the Moshulu decides it's time for a bow-to-stern reinvention of the tall ship restaurant-bar:

At least one market news watcher is bullish on the Philly real estate market's near-term prospects, especially in the commercial sector; speaking of commercial, one of the region's leading commercial brokerages offers its predictions for the coming year; the man who made Newbold has plans to recycle a theater at 17th and Snyder into yet another transformative development; and Philly makes the Democrats' short list for 2016:

The fight to save The Legendary Blue Horizon enters what could be its final round; the Hive, Philly's first co-working space designed for women, is already buzzing just one week after its Nov. 1 opening; Realtor-developer Ori Feibush sits down with Plan Philly to explain why he wants to unseat City Council member Kenyatta Johnson (D-2nd District); and somebody finally purchased that Buckminster Fuller-inspired geodesic home in Schwenksville:

Blue Horizon Fights For Its Life at Historic Designation Meeting This Wednesday (Hidden City Daily)Get a glimpse of Philadelphia's first female-only co-working space (Philadelphia Business Journal) On the record with Ori Feibush: Conflicts of interest, pay to play, rezoning and more (Plan Philly) SOLD: Geodesic

Lunchtime Quick Hits

When it's complete, the expanded Art Museum will look different only on the inside; Developers appear ready to ride to the rescue of the Cascia Center proposal; work will get under way soon on some simple improvements to a key link in the East Coast Greenway; and Brandywine Realty Trust breaks ground on the FMC Tower with a bang:
Art Museum rolling out its dramatic Gehry expansion (The Philadelphia Inquirer; subscription or purchase required)
Property next to St. Rita's site draws interest (The Philadelphia Inquirer|Philly.com)
Bike, pedestrian improvements connect Spring Garden Street, Schuylkill River Trail (Plan Philly)
Growing Tower, Growing Skyline (Hidden City Daily)

Lunchtime Quick Hits

An update on the Inquirer's Family Feud, with more juicy backstory added - we too wonder what the company's doing running a free website that not only serves up all the content of the papers' paywalled sites, such as this story, but also behaves at times like it's competing with them; in West Philly's Mill Creek section, a new apartment development looks like America; Thanks to its neighbors, Cedar Park's neighborhood diner is back in business after a fire and a botched demolition job next door all but destroyed it; and in case you've found it difficult to keep track of all the game-changing Philly developments we here at the RE Blog and our peers in the development media have been reporting on, Curbed offers a handy map for you to…

Client Testimonials

Selling a home in the current real estate market can be tough. Throughout the process, Dale and Carmel were extremely helpful and knowledgeable, and better yet they got the job done! I would highly recommend them!Click here to work with Carmel!